Mgt301 Current and Past Solved Objective
Mgt301 Current and Past Solved Objective
Mgt301 Current and Past Solved Objective
0334-6034849
Direct marketing means selling products by dealing directly with consumers rather than
through intermediaries.
Traditional methods include mail order, direct-mail selling, cold calling, telephone
selling, and door-to-door calling. More recently telemarketing, direct radio selling,
magazine and TV advertising, and on-line computer shopping have been developed.
The main advantages/ benefits of selling direct are that there is no need to share profit
margins and the producer has complete control over the sales process. Products are not
sold alongside those of competitors either.
Q no. 4: One question was related to mass marketing and new marketing concept?
Mass marketing:
New marketing:
New marketing concept is a philosophy. It makes the customer, and the satisfaction of his
or her needs, the focal point of all business activities. It is driven by senior managers,
passionate about joy their customers.
Q no. 5: One Question was on Cash cow, star and Question related?
a). Stars are high-growth, high-share businesses or products (they need heavy investment
to finance their rapid growth potential).
b). Cash Cows are low-growth, high-share businesses or products (they are established,
successful, and need less investment to hold share).
c). Question Marks are low-share business units in high-growth markets (they require a
lot of cash to hold their share).
d). Dogs are low-growth, low-share businesses and products (they may generate enough
cash to maintain them, but do not have much future).
Public relations include ongoing activities to ensure the overall company has a strong
public image. Public relations activities include helping the public to understand the
company and its products. Often, public relations are conducted through the media that is,
newspapers, television, magazines, etc. As noted above, public relations are often
considered as one of the primary activities included in promotions.
Publicity is mention in the media. Organizations usually have little control over the
message in the media, at least, not as they do in advertising. Regarding publicity,
reporters and writers decide what will be said.
1. What are the various tools of Public Relations? Name at least five.
1. PRINT MEDIA
2. PRESS RELEASE
3. PHOTOGRAPHS
4. BROCHURE
5. POSTER AND CALENDAR
6. WRITTEN SPEECH
7. INTERNAL NEWSLETTERS AND PUBLICATIONS
8. EVENT AND PRESS SUPPOR
9. CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS
10. NTERNET
11. E-MAIL
12. AUDIO AND VISUAL
13. NEWS AND PUBLICITY
1. Source.
2. encoding
3. Message.
4. channel
5. decoding
6. receiver
7. feedback
3. For what purpose public policy principles can be used? List down the key
principles for public policy towards marketing.
The origin of the Boston Matrix lies with the Boston Consulting Group in the early
1970s. It was devised as a clear and simple method for helping corporations decide which
parts of their business they should allocate their available cash to. Following the credit
crunch, this is newly important in some sectors because of the limited availability of
credit.
However, the Boston Matrix is also a good tool for thinking about where to apply other
finite resources: people, time and equipment.
Benefits:
A web community is a web site (or group of web sites) that is a virtual community. A
web community may take the form of a social network service, an Internet forum, a
group of blogs, or another kind of social software web application.
6. MR. X wants to start a business that would sell books online directly to the
customers. What type of distribution channel would you recommend that MR.X
should adopt.
One of the importance’s of any website or business is to bring your products or services
to the right people and to reach the target audience. There are a number of different
distribution channels available on the Internet which could be utilized efficiently to the
benefits of your website.
Distribution channels:
The basic difference between exploratory and descriptive research is the research design.
Exploratory research is a type of research done when the problem has not been clearly
defined. It is used to help determine the best way to research, collect data, and subject
selection.
Descriptive research, used often in social sciences and market research, is the study of
how a particular group, person, or thing behaves. Observations are noted without
influence being applied.
OR
The basic difference between exploratory and descriptive research is the research design.
Exploratory research follows a format that is less structured and more flexible than
descriptive research. This approach works well when the marketer doesn’t have an
understanding of the topic or the topic is new and it is hard to pinpoint the research
direction. The downside, however, is that results may not be as useful in aiding a
marketing decision. So why use this method? In addition to offering the marketer basic
information on a topic, exploratory research may also provide direction for a more formal
research effort. For instance, exploratory research may indicate who the key decision
makers are in a particular market thus enabling a more structured descriptive study
targeted to this group.
Question: What is the role of broker and agent in the marketing system?
Answer: Main function is to facilitate buying and selling, for which they earn a
commission on the selling price. Generally, specialize by product line or customer
types. BROKERS: Chief function is bringing buyers and sellers together and assisting
in negotiation. They are paid by the party who hired them, and do not carry inventory,
get involved in financing, or assume risk. Examples: food brokers, real estate brokers,
insurance brokers, and security brokers. AGENTS: Represent either buyers or sellers
on a more permanent basis than brokers do.
Question: Which are the strategies that can be pursued for each Strategic Business
Unit (SBU)?
Answer: a) The company can harvest the SBU b) The company can divest the SBU
c) The company can invest enough just to hold at the current level
Question: What are the key principles for public policy towards marketing?
Answer: a) Full consumer and producer freedom b) Potential harm should be
eliminated c) Producer should meet the basic needs of the consumer
Question: What 4 Cs will be used for the development of the marketing strategies of
21st centaury?
Answer: a) Care b) Choice c) Community d) Challenge
Question: Write down any five reasons of “why would a producer use wholesalers
rather than selling directly to consumers or retailers”?
Answer: Quite simply, wholesalers are often better at performing one or more of the
following channel functions: • Selling and promoting • Buying and assortment
building. • Bulk-breaking • Warehousing • Transportation • Financing • Risk bearing •
Market information • Management services and advice
Question: List down the chief factors that can be used for segmenting international
markets?
Answer: Geographical location Economic factors Political and legal factors
Cultural factors
Question: Why we use sales promotion tools? Answer: These can be used to introduce
new products, Get existing customers to buy
more, Attract new customers, and Combat competition, Maintain sales in off season,
Increase retail inventories, Tie in advertising and personal selling, Enhance personal
selling efforts.
Question: What are the five important decisions which must take into consideration
by the marketing management, while developing an advertising program?
Answer: Setting advertising objectives setting advertising budgets developing
advertising strategy Message decision and media decision evaluating advertising
campaign
Question: What are the primary criticisms of marketing functions with respect to the
impact on the individual consumer?
Answer: High price Deceptive practices high pressure selling Shoddy or unsafe
products Planned obsolescence Poor services to disadvantaged consumer
Question: What Image comes to mind when you hear the word “Marketing”?
Answer: Marketing is a process that revolves around the customers and there
requirements. It is a process of creating value in the form of goods, services, or ideas
that can improve the customer’s life.
Question: What are the basic goals of CRM (Customer relationship marketing)? Answer:
The idea of CRM is that it helps business use technology to gain insight into
the behavior of customer and values of those customers. If it works as hoped, a
business can: - Provide better customer services - Make call centers more efficient
Question: Write down the four common methods used to set the total budget for
advertising?
Answer: the affordable method Percentage of sale method Competitive
parity method Objective and task method
Question: What are the five important decisions which must take into consideration
by the marketing management, while developing an advertising program?
Answer: setting advertising objectives setting advertising budgets
Developing advertising strategy Message decision and media decision
Evaluating advertising campaign
Question: Describe two major steps which must be taken in order to deal effectively
with competitors and their strategies?
Answer: 1. The first step is competitor analysis where the company goes through the
process of identifying, assembling, and selecting key competitor. 2. Second step
is competitive marketing strategies where the company strongly positions itself
against competitors and fins a way to give itself the greatest possible competitor
advantage.
Question: What steps/components are suggested by George Yip for the total global
strategy?
Answer: I. Development of the core strategy which is the basis of the firm’s
competitive advantage. II. Internationalization of the strategy through expansion of
activities III. Step three integrates the strategy across countries
Question: What are the primary criticisms of marketing functions with respect to the
impact on the individual consumer? Answer: High price Deceptive practices High
pressure selling Shoddy
or unsafe products Planned obsolescence Poor services to disadvantaged
consumer
Question: Write down major uses of the marketing research in the organizations, any
five?
Answer: Major uses of the marketing research in the organizations are as following:
1. Measurement of market potential 2. Analysis of market share 3. Determination of
market characteristics 4. Sales analysis 5. Product testing 6. Forecasting 7. Studies of
business trends 8. Studies of competitors' products.
Question: Write down major uses of the marketing research in the organizations, any
five?
Answer: Major uses of the marketing research in the organizations are as following:
1. Measurement of market potential 2. Analysis of market share 3. Determination of
market characteristics 4. Sales analysis 5. Product testing 6. Forecasting 7. Studies of
business trends 8. Studies of competitors' products.
Question: What image come to mind when you hear the word Marketing
Answer: Some people think of advertisements or brochures, while others think of
public relations. The truth is, all of these—and many more things—make up the field
of marketing. The Knowledge Exchange Business Encyclopedia defines marketing as
“planning and executing the strategy involved in moving a good or service from
producer to consumer.” In simplified terms, marketers and others help move goods
and services through the creation and production process; at that point, marketers help
move the goods and services to consumers. But the connection goes even further:
Marketing can have a significant impact on all areas of the business and vice versa.
Question: What is meant by Price .What factors should be considered while setting
price.
Answer: All profit and nonprofit organizations must set prices on their products and
services. Price goes by many names (rent, tuition, fee, fare, rate, interest, toll,
premium, et cetera). Price is the amount of money charged for a product or service or
the sum of the values that consumers exchange for the benefits of having or using the
product or service. A company's pricing decisions are affected by both internal
company factors and external environmental factors a) Internal Factors Affecting
Pricing Decision Internal factors affecting pricing include the company's marketing
objectives, marketing mix strategy, costs, and organizational considerations. b)
External Factors Affecting Pricing Decisions External factors that affect pricing
decisions include the nature of the market and demand, competition, and other
environmental elements.
3. Business buyer behavior: The buying behavior of the organizations that buy goods
and services for use in the production of other products and services or for the
purpose of reselling or renting them to others at a profit
4. Business buying process: The decision process by which business buyers determine
which products and services their organizations need to purchase, and then find,
evaluate, and choose among alternative suppliers and brands
5. Buzz marketing: Cultivating opinion leaders and getting them to spread information
about a product or service to others in their communities
11. Corporate VMS: A vertical marketing system that combines successive stages of
production and distribution under single ownership-channel leadership is established
through common ownership
12. Customer relationship management (CRM): The overall process of building and
maintaining profitable customer relationships by delivering superior customer value
and satisfaction
13. Cost-plus pricing: Adding a standard markup to the cost of the product
21. Experience curve (learning curve) : The drop in the average per-unit production
cost that comes with accumulated production experience
22. Exclusive distribution: Giving a limited number of dealers the exclusive right to
distribute the company’s products in their territories.
23. Experimental research: The gathering of primary data by selecting matched
groups of subjects, giving them different treatments, controlling related factors, and
checking for differences in group responses
24. FOB-origin pricing: A geographical pricing strategy in which goods are placed
free on board a carrier; the customer pays the freight from the factory to the
destination.
25. Franchise: A contractual association between a manufacturer, wholesaler, or
service organization (a franchiser) and independent businesspeople (franchisees) who
buy the right to own and operate one or more units in the franchise system
27. Gatekeepers: People in the organization’s buying center that control the flow of
information to others.
28. Generation X: The 45 million people born between 1965 and 1976 in the “Birth
dearth” following the baby boom.
29. Global firm: A firm that, by operating in more than one country, gains R&D,
production, marketing, and financial advantages in its costs and reputation that are not
available to purely domestic competitors.
34. Integrated direct marketing: Direct marketing campaigns that use multiple
vehicles and multiple stages to improve response rates and profits.
35. Interactive marketing: Marketing by a service firm that recognizes that perceived
service quality depends heavily on the quality of buyer-seller interaction.
36. Internet: A vast public web of computer networks, which connects users of all
types all around the world to each other and to an amazingly large information
repository.
37. Management contracting: A joint venture in which the domestic firm supplies the
management know-how to a foreign company that supplies the capital; the domestic
firm exports management services rather than products.
38. Marketing communications mix (promotion mix): The specific mix of advertising,
personal selling, sales promotion, and public relations a company uses.
40. Engel’s laws: Differences noted over a century ago by Ernst Engel in how people
shift their spending across food, housing, transportation, health care, and other goods
and services categories as family income rises.
41. Generation Y: The 72 million children of the baby boomers, born between1977
and 1994.